South Korean pop star Rain cancels his concert

The Saturday night show at the Staples Center Saturday night show was called off "due to issues related to the show's production," according to a statement from Rain's promoter, V2B Global, posted on the arena's Web site.

The 25-year-old performer's show requires 28 trucks loaded with stage rigging and a 96-person entourage, the Los Angeles Times reported in an article on Rain published Saturday.

The Staples Center appearance was the final stop listed on the Web site of the "Rain's Coming" world tour that began in December in Seoul, South Korea.

Appearances in Honolulu, San Francisco, Atlanta, New York and San Jose, California, had also been canceled after concert organizers said they faced a copyright challenge from a Nevada-based record company Rain Corp.

A Nevada District Court dismissed the case last month, the Times reported.

About 80 percent of Saturday night's concert tickets had been sold, some to fans who had flown in from Asia for the show, promoters said. Full ticket refunds would be available beginning Monday, Staples' spokeswoman Cara Vanderhook said.

Nearly 200,000 Koreans live in Los Angeles, according to the U.S. Census, by far the largest grouping of America's estimated 1.2 million Korean immigrants.

Rain, whose real name is Jung Ji-Hoon, is widely popular across Asia for his hip-hop dance moves and sex appeal. He will be appearing in the action adventure film adaptation of the Japanese animated series "Speed Racer" by the Wachowski brothers, who created the "Matrix" movies.

Not that long ago, American soldiers would train their skills to counter insurgent and partisan military organizations. These days, they are trained to show resistance to the regular army of a potential adversary